You'll get Stevie Wonder, Martin Sexton and David Gray all wrapped into one when singer-songwriter Chris Bruni hits the Kennett Flash's stage Friday night. However, Bruni's concert will only cost you a fraction of what it would to see the respected performers his music reflects.

Songs from Bruni's latest album, "I've Been Here," released in 2009, clearly showed the artist exploring a darker side of himself, as well as touching on topics that aren't completely personal.

"I've Been Here" remains true to the accessible nature that Bruni, of Chadds Ford, Pa., carries with him in his music and his personal life. His mix of folk, pop, and soul on the project makes it easily accessible to new listeners from any age group or social status. Bruni's storytelling and unique vocals shine through on a level that's hard not to be impressed with.

Psychedelic-funk pioneer and music legend Bernie Worrell is piloting a new mother ship: the Bernie Worrell Orchestra, set to land at World Café Live at The Queen on Saturday.

Worrell is the original keyboardist for Parliament-Funkadelic (better known as P-Funk). He and the group were inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. His unmistakable, spaced-out sound fueled original P-Funk classics like "Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof Off the Sucker)" and "Chocolate City."

The Bernie Worrell Orchestra is a nine-piece ensemble Worrell co-founded with drummer/bandleader Evan Taylor. The group debuted in 2011 with "Bernie Worrell: Standards," a collection of jazz classics done in Worrell's signature raw, unclassifiable "Dr. Woo" style. The band toured widely in support of the album, playing new music reminiscent of late '60s and early '70s psychedelic rock, and well as R&B and funk.

Page 2 of 2 - It's only February, but you can celebrate the New Year, again, as the Delaware Art Museum will host its seventh annual Chinese New Year Party on Saturday.

Presented in conjunction with the Hockessin's Hanlin Chinese Culture Association, this festive, free celebration includes traditional Chinese art activities, artist demonstrations, a dragon art scavenger hunt, a dragon dance and Chinese yo-yo performance by the Chinese American Community Center Dance Troupe and Yo-Yo Club, of Hockessin. There will also be a special musical performance by Taiwanese Music Ensemble of New York.

Performers will really sink their teeth into this event, as 2013 is the Year of the Snake.

Murder, mystery and mayhem has made its way to the beach with the Clear Space Theatre performances of Agatha Christie's "The Mousetrap."

A murderer is on the loose and has infiltrated a group of snowed in strangers stuck in a stately manor in the English countryside.

"An intriguing aspect of the show is that every character involved has secrets - secrets that each is keeping from others, and in some cases even from themselves" said director Aleta Thompson. "We don't know what is true. We don't know whom to believe."

Members of the audience start to question reality right alongside the characters, as everyone seems to be lying.

"Though the play is 60 years old, the emotions that Christie churns up are here and now," said Thompson."